Kull: Difference between revisions

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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.Kull 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.Kull, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
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* [[Fake King]]
* [[Fake King]]
* [[Feuding Families]]
* [[Feuding Families]]
* [[Fire Forged Friends]]
* [[Fire-Forged Friends]]
* [[Glory Seeker]]
* [[Glory Seeker]]
* [[Go Mad From the Revelation]]
* [[Go Mad From the Revelation]]
* [[The Good Chancellor]]: First Councillor Tu.
* [[The Good Chancellor]]: First Councillor Tu.
* [[Green Eyed Monster]]
* [[Green-Eyed Monster]]
* [[Heterosexual Life Partners]]: Kull and Brule the Lance-slayer, justified by the fact Brule acts as his bodyguad and also is one his few true friends and collaborators.
* [[Heterosexual Life Partners]]: Kull and Brule the Lance-slayer, justified by the fact Brule acts as his bodyguad and also is one his few true friends and collaborators.
* [[Hidden Depths]]
* [[Hidden Depths]]
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* [[I Am the Trope]]: "I AM THE LAW!", Kull said, fed up with the Can't-Marry-Slaves law. He takes an ax to it. Could very well be a [[Trope Namer]]
* [[I Am the Trope]]: "I AM THE LAW!", Kull said, fed up with the Can't-Marry-Slaves law. He takes an ax to it. Could very well be a [[Trope Namer]]
* [[Identical Grandson]]
* [[Identical Grandson]]
* [[In Harms Way]]
* [[In Harm's Way]]
* [[It Was a Gift]]
* [[It Was a Gift]]
* [[Lizard Folk]]: The Snakemen
* [[Lizard Folk]]: The Snakemen
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* [[No Ontological Inertia]]
* [[No Ontological Inertia]]
* [[Obvious Trap]]
* [[Obvious Trap]]
* [[Or Was It a Dream]]
* [[Or Was It a Dream?]]
* [[Our Ghosts Are Different]]
* [[Our Ghosts Are Different]]
* [[Pet the Dog]]: Kull has a soft spot for young lovers and other such fools.
* [[Pet the Dog]]: Kull has a soft spot for young lovers and other such fools.
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* [[Requisite Royal Regalia]]
* [[Requisite Royal Regalia]]
* [[Royal Blood]]
* [[Royal Blood]]
* [[Screw the Rules I Make Them]]: Look at [[I Am the Trope]] above.
* [[Screw the Rules, I Make Them]]: Look at [[I Am the Trope]] above.
* [[Sealed Evil in A Can]]: The Screaming Skull of Silence. Kull almost ends the world out of sheer boredom.
* [[Sealed Evil in A Can]]: The Screaming Skull of Silence. Kull almost ends the world out of sheer boredom.
* [[Shoot the Dog]]: In "Exile of Atlantis", Kull throws a knife in a girl's heart to spare her from being burned to death.
* [[Shoot the Dog]]: In "Exile of Atlantis", Kull throws a knife in a girl's heart to spare her from being burned to death.
* [[The Power of Friendship]]: Despict being from enemy races Brule shares with Kull a great friendship, in more than one occasion each one has saved the life of the other, even in one situation where they had to face a [[Cosmic Horror]].
* [[The Power of Friendship]]: Despict being from enemy races Brule shares with Kull a great friendship, in more than one occasion each one has saved the life of the other, even in one situation where they had to face a [[Cosmic Horror]].
* [[Schrodingers Butterfly]]
* [[Schrodinger's Butterfly]]
* [[Self Made Man]]
* [[Self-Made Man]]
* [[Talking in Your Dreams]]
* [[Talking in Your Dreams]]
* [[Time Travel]]: In ''Kings of the Night'', Kull visits [[Bran Mak Morn]] who lives 100,000 years later.
* [[Time Travel]]: In ''Kings of the Night'', Kull visits [[Bran Mak Morn]] who lives 100,000 years later.

Revision as of 22:22, 8 January 2014

Kull is a character appearing in a series of short stories by Robert E Howard. Kull is a barbarian hailing from Atlantis, but was exiled from his homeland. After some years as an adventurer, Kull made himself king of Valusia in a bloody coup. He lived approximately 100,000 years ago (according to Kings of the Night).

Howard's more famous Conan the Barbarian inhabits the same continuity as Kull, but lives many thousand years later. Kull is a precursor of sorts of Conan; indeed, the first Conan story was a rewrite of a Kull story Howard had not sold. Both are fierce barbarian warriors, but Kull is a more thoughtful, philosophical character.

The Kull stories are a peripheral part of the Cthulhu Mythos. Perhaps most notably, Cthulhu fans will recognize the Serpent People who appear in The Shadow Kingdom.

Kull stories written by Robert E. Howard

Few Kull stories were actually published in the lifetime of Howard, as the character was not particularly popular.

  • The Shadow Kingdom. First published in August, 1929. First Kull story.
  • The Mirrors of Tuzun Thune. First published in September, 1929.
  • Kings of the Night. First published in November, 1930. Features a crossover with Bran Mak Morn.
  • The King and the Oak, a poem. First published in February, 1939.
  • The Altar and the Scorpion. First published in 1967.
  • Black Abyss, also known as The Black City. First published in 1967. Howard actually left the story unfinished. Lin Carter added further chapters and a conclusion to the story.
  • By This Axe I Rule. First published in 1967. Famed because Howard revised the story to The Phoenix On the Sword (1932), the first Conan story.
  • The Curse of the Golden Skull. First published in 1967.
  • Delcarde's Cat, also known as The Cat and the Skull. First published in 1967.
  • Exile of Atlantis. First published in 1967. Howard finished the story, but never gave it a title.
  • The Skull of Silence, also known as The Screaming Skull of Silence. First published in 1967.
  • Swords of the Purple Kingdom. First published in 1967.
  • The Striking of the Gong. There are two version of this tale. The original Howard version was first published in 1976, and a version revised by Lin Carter in 1967.
  • Riders Beyond the Sunrise. There are two version of this tale. The original Howard version was first published in 1976, and a version revised by Lin Carter in 1967.
  • Wizard and Warrior. There are two version of this tale. The original story draft by Howard was published in 1978, an expanded tale by Lin Carter appeared in 1967.


Some Kull stories here.

See also: Robert E Howard, Conan the Barbarian, Bran Mak Morn.

Not to be confused with the big Urgals from Christopher Paolini's The Inheritance Cycle (though Kull probably inspired their name) or with the movie Krull although there was a 1997 movie Kull with Kevin Sorbo in the title role.


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